:11:02
I'll settle for a few more
like Sylvester.
:11:04
Look at what that crackerjack did.
:11:06
All our emphasis has been on
keeping the world out of a secret lab.
:11:10
No one ever considered
the possibility of a baby escaping.
:11:13
Just look at this wonderful world we've
created for our babies to grow up in.
:11:18
Why would anyone
want to escape from here?
:11:20
The one who did is in the work station,
no doubt planning his next escape.
:11:32
Hello, Sylvester.
:11:35
- What's he constructing?
- We don't know.
:11:37
He builds all kinds
of extraordinary things.
:11:39
For all kinds of extraordinary purposes.
:11:42
Just look at that intensity.
:11:44
There's no other baby like Sylvester.
:11:46
Well, maybe one.
:11:48
His twin, Whit?
:11:51
Whit!
:11:54
Mayday!
:11:56
Whitley, where is helper number one?
:11:58
Give me the lug wrench. Whit, hurry up.
:12:00
Go! On the double!
:12:06
Oh, mama!
:12:11
Mama.
:12:14
Listen, you monkey.
:12:15
This is a monkey wrench!
:12:17
Plumber's helper number one,
you're fired. Get out of town.
:12:23
What is that terrible noise?
:12:27
Noise to us.
:12:28
But the computers analyse
every possible permutation.
:12:31
What we hear as incoherent noise
may actually be a musical masterpiece.
:12:35
Listen to our computer's
interpretation of Basil's playing.
:12:41
That's remarkable.
:12:42
It has all the complexities
of a symphony by Haydn or Beethoven.
:12:46
If that's the case...
:12:47
it's possible that what we hear
as baby talk is actually conversation.
:12:52
Exactly. And look at this.
A child writing on a pad, right? No.
:12:57
After checking all languages...
:12:58
we found out they're writing
the cuneiform language.